The genome rearrangement problem is to find the most economical explanation for observed differences between the gene orders of two genomes. Such an explanation is provided in terms of events that change the order of genes in a genome. We present a new approach to the genome rearrangement problem, according to which this problem is viewed as the problem of planning rearrangement events that transform one genome to the other. This method differs from the existing ones in that we can put restrictions on the number of events, specify the cost of events with functions, possibly based on the length of the gene fragment involved, and add constraints controlling search. With this approach, we have described genome rearrangements in the action description language ADL, and studied the evolution of Metazoan mitochondrial genomes and the evolution of Campanulaceae chloroplast genomes using the planner TLplan. We have observed that the phylogenies reconstructed using this approach conform with the most widely accepted ones.

Content Area: 16. Planning and Scheduling

Subjects: 1.11 Planning; 11. Knowledge Representation

Submitted: May 10, 2005

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